Mali soldiers detain senior officers in apparent mutiny

Malian soldiers took up arms in the garrison town of
Kati on Tuesday and began detaining senior military officers in an apparent
mutiny, raising fears of a potential coup after several months of anti-government
demonstrations calling for the president's resignation.
It was not immediately clear who was behind the
latest turmoil to wrack Mali, but the unrest erupted at the very same military
barracks where the country's 2012 coup originated.
In the nearby capital of Bamako, government workers
fled their offices as armed men began detaining officials including the
country's finance minister Abdoulaye Daffe.
“Officials are being arrested — it's total
confusion,” said an officer at Mali's Ministry of Internal Security, who spoke
on condition of anonymity because he is not allowed to speak to journalists.
It was not immediately known where embattled
President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita was when the chaos erupted Tuesday. About 100
of the protesters who have called for his ouster gathered midday in Bamako in a
show of support for the mutiny, witnesses said.
Armored tanks and military vehicles could be seen on
the streets of Kati, located only 15 kilometers (less than 10 miles) from the
capital. The French Embassy in Bamako tweeted that residents of Kati and Bamako
should stay indoors amid the latest developments.
The dramatic developments Tuesday bore a worrisome
resemblance to the events leading up to the 2012 military coup, which
ultimately unleashed years of chaos in Mali.
On March 21, 2012 a mutiny erupted at the Kati
military camp as rank-and-file soldiers began rioting and then broke into the
camp’s armory. After grabbing weapons they headed for the seat of government,
led by then Capt. Amadou Haya Sanogo.
Sanogo was later forced to hand over power to a
civilian transitional government that then organized elections. The man who won
that 2013 vote — Mali's current president — has faced mounting pressure to step
down as his unpopularity has grown.
Regional mediators have urged him to share power in
a unity government but those overtures were swiftly rejected by opposition
leaders who said they would not stop short of Keita's ouster.
The current president has faced growing criticism of
how his government has handled the relentless Islamic insurgency engulfing the
country once praised as a model of democracy in the region. The military faced
a wave of particularly deadly attacks in the north last year, prompting the
government to close its most vulnerable outposts as part of a reorganization
aimed at stemming the losses.